Vol. 21 No. 4, September 2007
Index
- Mervyn Lamont.
- Passing of a friend.
- The Fed dances.
- USTR time spent.
- The Greenspan years.
- Celebrating 20 years of The International Economy.
- Central banking dermatologists.
- Summers speaks: in an exclusive interview, the Harvard professor takes on the subprime crisis, moral hazard, and Alan Greenspan's inflation forecast.
- Blinder baloney: today's scare talk of jobs outsourcing is grossly exaggerated.
- Advising the candidates: who advises the 2008 presidential candidates on economic policy?
- Twenty years after black Monday: is the world better or worse prepared to handle financial crises? TIE asked the three key former U.S. officials who managed the 1987 stock market crash--E. Gerald Corrigan, David Ruder, and Manuel Johnson.
- Germany fires back: and who does Adam Posen think he is, anyway?
- Schwab on trade: in an exclusive interview, America's chief trade negotiator assesses the world.
- The coming triple-digit oil prices: most think tanks and government experts predict a price decline in coming decades. They're dead wrong.
- The credit crisis is not over: the anatomy of a financial unravelling.
- Global warming losers: why developing world agriculture stands to suffer big time.
- IIF at 25: TIE sat down with the Institute of International Finance's Charles Dallara to discuss the future of the global financial system.
- New China worries: the Chinese military is snapping up the latest in cutting-edge Western technology. Is that good?
- The great China challenge: America's G7 deputy makes the case that when China succeeds, America succeeds.
- China's yuan decision: the economic costs of the inflexible exchange rate now outweigh its benefits.
- Just the facts: TIE's executive news service.